Citizen scientists are already providing large amounts of data for
monitoring biodiversity, but they could do much more, according to a new
study published in the journal
Biological Conservation, which
suggests that citizen science has the potential to contribute much more
to regional and global assessments of biodiversity. Citizen scientists
are regular people who provide data or input to science, for example by
monitoring species in their community or examining satellite imagery for
evidence of deforestation or land use change.
“Citizen
scientists are already contributing enormously to environmental
science,” says IIASA researcher Linda See. “For example, a huge amount
of species occurrence data is provided by members of the interested
public. The question we addressed was, where are citizens contributing
and where are they not, and how can we draw on this phenomenon to help
fill the gaps in science?”
The new article looks at international
conventions on biodiversity and endangered species, and the indicators
that are needed to track biodiversity on a global scale, known as
Essential Biodiversity Variables (EBVs). It examines the areas where
citizen scientists already contribute, those where they do not, and what
areas could benefit from expansion of citizen science efforts.
“Biodiversity
is essential to our well-being on planet Earth, providing core
ecosystem services such as pollination, pest control, and buffering of
extreme events. With many continuing pressures on land, biodiversity is
constantly threatened so there is a need to better monitor this valuable
resource globally. But there are many big data gaps in biodiversity,
often in those places where the need is greatest. Citizen scientists can
help to fill some of these gaps, both geographically and
taxonomically,” says Mark Chandler, Director of Research Initiatives at
the Earthwatch Institute, who led the study.
The
study represents the most comprehensive survey to date of citizen
science, including community-based monitoring. It finds that citizen
scientists are one of the main sources of data on species occurrence, in
particular for birds and especially in North America and Europe. The
researchers argue that such programs could be strategically expanded in
order to provide more data on other indicators and from countries
outside North America and Europe.
The researchers also found that
while a lot of citizen-generated data already exists, less than 10%
finds its way into global biodiversity monitoring. This bottleneck comes
from a lack of resources, issues of interoperability, and a need for
data repositories. Although the Global Biodiversity Information Facility has
been a great success for curating global species occurrence data, this
represents only 1 out of 22 EBVs. The researchers say that it is
important to establish similar repositories for other EBVs.
0 comments:
Post a Comment